NoRegretsCoyote
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I'm not sure that's the best strategy.Or you can just make voluntary payments of €500 per year to the Dept of Social protection to claim the OAP
Ok just gone 40 and I think im in a good financial position , married with 1 child
house - mortgage free valued @ €450k
cash savings €670k - 300k of this inherited
Pensions € 110k
Investments €130k
Farm land worth €350k inherited
Wife pension €80k
Wife Savings €30k
Salary 85k + Bonus
we own both our cars approx €65k between both cars
This should be reversed.Ok just gone 40 and I think im in a good financial position , married with 1 child
house - mortgage free valued @ €450k
cash savings €670k - 300k of this inherited
Pensions € 110k
Investments €130k
Farm land worth €350k inherited
Wife pension €80k
Wife Savings €30k
Salary 85k + Bonus
we own both our cars approx €65k between both cars
You have far too much cash on deposit. You should invest the amount you have in cash and leave on deposit the amount you have in investments. By using the growth of the capital markets on an amount like €670,000, you'll be alright in the long term.i dont understand??
This is correct, but it should be done in the most tax-efficient manner.You have far too much cash on deposit. You should invest the amount you have in cash and leave on deposit the amount you have in investments. By using the growth of the capital markets on an amount like €670,000, you'll be alright in the long term.
I'd have read this 6.6% as being based on current salary only on year one? If that was the case - then it would seem the approach would be not pay the voluntary contribution in year one (not worth it - invest the money instead) and start in year two?I'm not sure that's the best strategy.
The voluntary rate is 6.6% so the OP would be paying €5k-ish p/a based on his current salary until retirement. And it would preclude any earned or investment income.
On something like a €10k rental income he would only pay the minimum €500.
A discretionary fund manager won't invest it all in one day, they will invest it over a number of weeks/ months. They will also construct a portfolio of shares, unit trusts as well as funds, so deemed disposal wouldn't apply to most of the money invested.This is correct, but it should be done in the most tax-efficient manner.
What seems obvious to me is to stuff your own pension fund at least up to tax-relieved limits while you are still working.
After that it's not so obvious. For example ETFs have a pretty heavy tax treatment (deemed disposal).
I would take professional advice on this. I think you need to be careful in how you convert north of half a million euros from cash to another asset class. Pay someone a fee for this, not someone trying to sell you a product.
The wording is a bit ambiguous I agree. But I think the last year of employment is the anchor point.If that was the case - then it would seem the approach would be not pay the voluntary contribution in year one (not worth it - invest the money instead) and start in year two?
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